A chronicle of the part a small resort town on the south coast of England played in the story of the greatest rock 'n' roll group the world has ever known

Yeah Yeah Yeah: The Beatles & Bournemouth

Click on the cover for information about the book. Available to order now.

10 March 2013

Yoghurt fights with The Beatles!

Photo by Harry Taylor, copyright Dave Robinson

Anglo-French
singer Louise Cordet, a god-daughter of Prince Philip, toured with The Beatles,
Roy Orbison and Gerry and the Pacemakers in the spring of 1963, playing the
Southampton Gaumont on 20 May where the Bournemouth
Times team of reporter Tony Crawley and photographer Harry Taylor caught up
with her on assignment for Cinémondemagazine.

The Beatles’
star was very much in the ascendant and the tour programme had been hastily
rewritten to take account of their higher profile so that they were billed as co-headliners
with Orbison.

Louise
remembers the tour well and shares a series of anecdotes in Yeah Yeah Yeah: The Beatles &
Bournemouth.

“They were
really very sweet to me and we were always larking around. I would write
something like ‘Fish Face’ on their mirror and they would hide from me around a
corner then leap out and shower me with water. We had yoghurt fights, that kind
of thing. But I had no clue who they were before I met them as I’d been on tour
in France with Johnny Hallyday – who wasn’t terribly nice – and The Beatles
hadn’t yet made much impact outside of the UK. So as far as I was concerned
they were just another group, not at all starry, very humble. Nothing I’d seen
could have prepared me for the reception given to The Beatles. I think they
were a bit overwhelmed by it all.

“I had a
chaperone with me because I was very young, just 18, and although they were
obviously quite worldly by then after being through Hamburg and what have you,
they were always very protective of me. I’m not sure why, maybe they saw I was
a bit vulnerable.

“I remember
sitting with John once and I don’t know that he opened up to me, but he told me
about Hamburg saying people kept trying to push these substances on them but he
wasn’t interested. Well, I swallowed all that in my innocence!

“He spoke about
his aunt Mimi as well, saying how close he was to her and how she’d brought him
up.

“I saw them a few times after the tour. I took a
friend with me to see them north of London once and they asked us backstage. I
saw them in Paris and Paul came to my brother’s 21st birthday with Jane Asher,
but we sort of lost touch after that.”

:: The full interview - and many others - can be found in Yeah Yeah Yeah: The Beatles & Bournemouth, available to order here.

No comments:

Post a Comment

About Me

The book Yeah Yeah Yeah: The Beatles & Bournemouth continues to spark interest from around the world. A chronicle of the connections between a genteel south coast resort and the greatest rock 'n' roll group of them all, the publication of the book has prompted a wealth of new stories to come to light, many of which are featured in this blog, as is a series of photos, audio and video clips relating to The Beatles and the part Bournemouth has played in their legend.
if you have memories or anecdotes about The Beatles in Bournemouth please share, don't be shy.
JAN 2017 - HOPE TO BE ABLE TO SHARE SOME EXCITING NEWS WITH YOU SOON!
The book is available from www.natulapublications.co.uk